A Wife's Duty - LightNovelsOnl.com
You're reading novel online at LightNovelsOnl.com. Please use the follow button to get notifications about your favorite novels and its latest chapters so you can come back anytime and won't miss anything.
"And I have the honour to a.s.sure you, sir," said he, "that if you visit Paris, and the Rue Rivoli, _numero_ 22, you will there find your nephew romantically happy with a most fascinating _chere amie_ who had once the honour of bearing my name."
"I turned from him," adds my uncle, "with disgust, as you, I hope, will turn from your unworthy husband, and come back, my dearest niece, to your affectionate and anxious uncle."
For one moment I felt inclined to obey his wishes--my husband really living with an abandoned woman, as her avowed protector! wife, country, reputation, sacrificed for her sake!
Horrible and disgusting it was indeed! but I soon recollected, that if it was really a duty in me to come to Paris for his sake at all, it was equally a duty now, for his criminality could not destroy his claims on my duty; nor could his breach of duty excuse the neglect of mine. In short, whether love or conscience influenced me, I know not, but I resolved to stay where I was. And so he was in the Rue Rivoli! I was glad to know where he was, but I did not as before wish to see him, and even to gaze on him unseen. No: I felt him degraded, and I thought that I should now turn away if I met him.
We took a pleasant and retired lodging on the Italian Boulevards; but I soon found that in this situation we were not likely to learn any tidings of Pendarves; and by the time we had been ten days at Paris, Juan and I resolved, having first felt our way, to put a plan which we had formed into execution.
It was absolutely necessary that we should have opportunities of knowing what was going forward in public affairs, in order to learn the degree of safety or of danger in which Pendarves was; and if Madame Beauvais had really been a spy in London for the Convention, she must be connected with the governing persons in Paris.
Accordingly, we hired a small house which had stood empty some time in a street through which most of the members of the National Convention were likely to pa.s.s in their way to and fro. The street door opened into a front parlour, and that into a second parlour: of this with a kitchen and two chambers consisted the whole of the house. Humble as it was, I a.s.sure you it was on the plan of one which Robespierre occupied in the zenith of his power.
The windows of the front parlour Juan converted into a sort of shop window; and as he and his wife were both good bakers, they filled it with a variety of cakes, which they called _gateaux republicains_; and it was not long before, to our great joy, they obtained an excellent sale for their commodity. This emboldened us to launch out still more; and in hopes that our shop might become a sort of resting and lounging place to the men in power as they pa.s.sed, Juan put a coat of paint on the outside of the house, converted the parlour into a complete shop, and at length put a notice over the door in large tricolour letters, importing that at such hours every day plum and plain pudding _a l'Americaine_ was to be had _hot_, as well as _gateaux republicains_.
If this _affiche_ succeeded, there was a chance of Juan's hearing something relative to the objects of our anxiety from the members of the Convention, while I myself, hidden behind the gla.s.s door of the back parlour, might also overhear some to me important conversation. At any rate, it was worth the trial; and experience proved that the scheme was not as visionary as it at first appeared.
It was not without considerable emotion that I saw our shop opened, and business prospering. Never, surely, was there a more curious and singular situation than mine. Think of me, the daughter of an American Loyalist, living an unprotected woman in the metropolis of republican France, and helping to make puddings and cakes for the members of the National Convention!
Though I have never paused in my narrative to mention politics, still you cannot suppose that I was ignorant of what was pa.s.sing on the great theatre of the Continent, nor that the names of the chief actors in it were unknown to me. On the contrary, I often beguiled my lonely hours with reading the accounts of the proceedings at Paris; had mourned not only over the fate of the royal family, but had deplored the death of those highly gifted men, and that great though mistaken woman (Madame Roland) in whom I fancied that I perceived some of the republican virtue to which others only pretended; and though far from being a Republican myself, I could not but respect those who, having adopted a principle however erroneous, acted upon it consistently. But with Brissot and his party ended all my interest in the public men of France, though their names were familiar to me, and aversion and dread were the only feelings which they excited.
Therefore, when on the 1st of February, 1794, we opened a shop for puddings and cakes, and I through the curtain of a gla.s.s-door saw it thronged with customers, some of whom I concluded were regicides and murderers, my heart died within me. I felt as if I stood in the den of wild beasts, and I wished myself again in safe and happy England.
Juan was frequently asked a number of questions by his customers; such as who he was, and whence he came, and how long he had been there; and his answer was, that he was born in America, and born a slave, and so was his little wife, but a good master made him free.
"Bravo! and _Vive la liberte!_ and you are like us; we were slaves, now we are free," always shouted the deluded people to whom he thus talked.
Juan used to go on to say that he had heard his master was in France, and poor, and so they left America and came to work for him (applauses again); but that he found he was dead. "And so," said he, "as I liked Paris, we resolved to stay here, and make nice things for the republicans in Europe."
This tale had its effect; Juan was hailed as _bon citoyen_ Duval, and promised custom and protection.
"Oh! dear Miss Helen," cried Juan, (as he usually called me) "what b.l.o.o.d.y dogs some of them look! No doubt some of them were members of parliament. _They_ govern a nation indeed, who were such fools as to be so easily taken in by my story! Psha! I should make a better parliament man myself."
At length, we saw some of the distinguished men.
Juan heard one of the party call two of the others Hebert and Danton; and he made an excuse to come in and tell me which was which. I looked at them, and was mortified to find that Danton was so pleasant-looking.
When they went away, which they did not do till they had eaten largely, and commended what they ate, a wild, singularly-looking man entered the shop, in all the dirty and negligent attire of a _sans culotte_, and desired a plum pudding _a l'Americaine_ to be set before him; declaring that had it been _a l'Anglaise_ he could not have eaten it, as it would have tasted of the slavery of that wretched grovelling country England.
When the pudding was served, he talked more than he ate, and made minute inquiries into the history of Alice and Juan; but when he heard who and what they were, he ran to them, and insisted on giving each the fraternal embrace--"for I," said he, "am Anacharsis Cloots! the orator of the human race; and dear to my heart is the injured being who was born in servitude. Blessed be the memory of the master who broke your chains!"
He then resumed his questions, and, to my great alarm, desired to know if they lived alone in the house. Juan, off his guard, replied,
"No; we have a lodger."
"Indeed! let me see him."
"Him! 'tis a woman."
"Better and better still! Let me see her then. Is she young and handsome?"
"Helas! la pauvre femme! elle ne voit personne, elle est malade a la mort."[7]
"Eh bien, que je la voye! Je la guerirai moi."[8]
"Tu! citoyen? Oh non! elle ne se guerira jamais."[9]
"Mais oui, te dis-je. Ou est-elle? Je veux absolument faire sa connaissance."[10]
"C'est impossible. Elle est au lit."[11]
"Quest-ce que cela fait?"[12]
"Comment, les femmes chez nous ne recoivent jamais les visites quand elles sont au lit."[13]
"Mais, quelle betise! au moins dis moi son nom, qui elle est, et tout cela."[14]
[Footnote 7: Alas! poor woman! she is sick to death.]
[Footnote 8: Well, let me see her: I will cure her.]
[Footnote 9: You! citizen? Oh no! she will never be cured.]
[Footnote 10: Yes, I tell you. Where is she? I will absolutely make her acquaintance.]
[Footnote 11: Impossible. She is in bed.]
[Footnote 12: What does that signify?]
[Footnote 13: Our ladies never receive visits in bed.]
[Footnote 14: What nonsense! But tell me her name and all that.]
And Juan told him that I was the relation of his benefactor; that I was in reduced circ.u.mstances, having had a bad husband; and that he and his wife had taken me to live with them, and never would desert me.
"_O les braves gens!_" exclaimed he.--But what an agony I endured all this time! Afraid that this mad-headed enthusiast would really insist on paying me a visit, I ran up stairs, put on my green spectacles which Juan insisted on my buying (for he really thought me a perfect beauty, and that all who looked must love); then tied up my face in a handkerchief, pulled over it a slouch cap, and lay down on the bed, drawing the curtains round. But Alice came up to tell me the strange man was gone.
He declared, however, that the next time he came he would see _la pauvre malade_.
But fortunately we never saw him again, except when he stopped in company with others, and was too much taken up in laying down the law for the benefit of the human race, to remember an individual.
You will not be surprised when I tell you, that slight as was my knowledge of the persons of Hebert and Anacharsis Cloots, and little as I had heard of their voices, still the circ.u.mstance of having seen their faces and heard them speak made all the difference between rejoicing at their deserved fate and regretting it. They were guillotined during the course of the next month; and I shuddered when I heard they were no more, catching myself saying, "Poor men!" very frequently during the rest of the day.
I could give you some interesting details of many events that now happened in affecting succession; but they have been painted by abler hands than mine: I shall only say further concerning our shop-visitors, that more than once the great Dictator himself took shelter there from a shower of rain, and ate a _gateau republicain_. When he first came, Juan, who had seen him often before, sent Alice to tell me who he was; and I cannot describe the sensation of horror with which he inspired me; for nature there had made the outside equally ugly with the inside. He asked many questions of Juan relative to who he was, and whence and why he came; and I saw his quick and restless eye looking suspiciously round, as if he feared an unseen dagger on every side: and so watchful and observant was his glance, that I retreated from the curtain lest he should see me. I was also terrified to perceive that my poor Juan was not so much at his ease with _him_, and did not tell his story with so steady a voice as usual. But perhaps like Louis the XIVth, Robespierre was flattered with the consciousness of inspiring awe. Juan was, however, a little relieved by the entrance of Danton, who spoke to him as an old acquaintance; on which Robespierre turned to Danton and said, "Then _you know_ these people?"
"Yes; and their puddings too. Do I not, citizen?" he good naturedly replied; and soon after, Robespierre and he departed together.
Certain it is that I breathed more freely after they were gone.
Not long after this, Danton and Camille des Moulins came together; and though they spoke very low, Juan heard them talk of _la Citoyenne Beauvais_, and then they talked of _son bel Americain Anglois_,[15] (so it was clear they knew who my husband really was,) and they whispered and laughed. We then heard the name of Colonel Newton, an Englishman by birth, who had served in foreign armies all his life, and had the melancholy distinction of being the only British subject who was put to death by the guillotine. But Juan heard him mentioned by these men, and soon after we knew he was arrested; for Juan was in the habit of frequenting the Palais Royal and its gardens in the evening, and other places of public resort, and there he was sure to hear the news of the day. At first, he only heard that an Englishman was arrested; and his emotion was such, that if any one had looked at him it must have been perceived; but no one noticed him, and presently some one named Colonel Newton as the conspirator who had been denounced and imprisoned.